CREATION-EVOLUTION ENCYCLOPEDIA

Natural selection is supposed, through random action, to have produced all
the species. But when men intelligently and methodically work with plants and
animals they produce new subspecies. Yet, in doing so, they never produce new
species. If planned breeding cannot produce new species, how could random
accidents ever do it? The truth is that accidents never select anything
worthwhile. In contrast, planned breeding, which is "selective breeding," never
produces new species—and the making of new species is what evolution is all
about. Evolutionary theory is a myth. This is science vs. evolution—a
Creation-Evolution Encyclopedia, brought to you by Creation Science Facts.

There Is an Outer Wall: There is always a limit, beyond which the
species cannot go Reduced Fitness as the Species Move Away from the Norm: The farther from the basic species type, the greater the reduction in
ability to cope The Sugar Beet Experiment: Even specific factors reach an
outer limit. Conclusion: Not even purposive breeding can go across the
species barrier.

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